Showing posts with label Animal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Animal. Show all posts

Sunday, September 4, 2011

Rest paid dividends for Animal Kingdom; Preakness awaits

Sunday, September 4, 2011
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LOUISVILLE ? When Animal Kingdom showed potential by gaining his first career victory in his second lifetime start Oct. 23 at Keeneland Race Course in Lexington, Ky., Barry Irwin made a key decision on behalf of Team Valor International.





  • John Velazquez rides Animal Kingdom to victory in the 137th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs.

    By Mark Zerof, US Presswire


    John Velazquez rides Animal Kingdom to victory in the 137th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs.



By Mark Zerof, US Presswire


John Velazquez rides Animal Kingdom to victory in the 137th Kentucky Derby at Churchill Downs.






Most would have given the youngster his first opportunity in a stakes race. Irwin took the road less traveled by rewarding the 2-year-old with a month on a farm where the feed was plentiful and young bones could grow.


"That's admirable. You don't see it that much these days," trainer Graham Motion said. "A horse doesn't have to be injured to give him time off."


Animal Kingdom's tender handling throughout his young career produced unimagined dividends when he became the first Thoroughbred in history to use the Kentucky Derby for a successful dirt debut Saturday.


He and jockey John Velazquez, who ended an 0-for-12 Derby slide as a late replacement for injured and unhappy Robby Albarado, look to be well-positioned for an optimal run at the middle leg of the Triple Crown, the May 21 Preakness Stakes. No horse has won the Triple Crown since Affirmed in 1978.


In a year in which leading Derby contenders proved too fragile, Animal Kingdom benefited from the gentlest of care. He made three starts on synthetic surfaces and one on grass before showing a record Churchill Downs crowd of 164,858 that he can run on anything with a startling 2¾-length victory against Nehro.


His four career starts are the fewest for a Derby winner since Exterminator in 1918. The six-week gap between his 2¾-length victory in the Spiral Stakes — his only test against stakes competition — and the 1¼-mile Run for the Roses marked the longest layoff since Needles in 1956.


"The fact that he's lightly raced bodes well for him to go on to the Preakness," Motion said.


The 1 3/16-mile Preakness, with its two-week turnaround, looks to represent a greater hurdle for the son of Leroidesanimaux to a Triple Crown than the 1½-mile Belmont Stakes on June 11.


"The Belmont is the kind of race this horse was bred to win," says Irwin, noting that the German dam, Dalicia, also was known for stamina.


Animal Kingdom was given one of the easiest possible paths to the Derby. He was held back until he made his first 3-year-old start March 3 in an allowance race at Florida's Gulfstream Park. He placed second by a diminishing head in his first test on grass.


Since he needed graded stakes earnings to qualify for the expected full Derby field of 20, he was given his first such test in the Grade 3 Spiral Stakes at Turfway Park in Florence, Ky., on March 26. He powered clear by 2¾ lengths for jockey Alan Garcia.


Animal Kingdom's résumé was so thin that many saw him as an understudy to Toby's Corner, who pulled a stunning upset of 2-year-old champion Uncle Mo when he won the Wood Memorial for Motion on April 9.


"I didn't think he was a second-tier horse, but I knew the other horse belonged (in the Derby)," the trainer said.


Toby's Corner never reached Churchill Downs, joining a list of top contenders that includes Jaycito, Premier Pegasus, The Factor and ailing Uncle Mo, who fell off while preparing for the most important start of their lives.


Uncle Mo is expected to undergo an extensive medical exam to determine why he is eating poorly and losing weight.


"I don't see any way he makes any of the Triple Crown races," trainer Todd Pletcher said.


Owner Mike Repole has no regrets about scratching Uncle Mo last Friday.


"If he had run in this race, it could have knocked him out for the entire year," he said. "We made the right decision."


The son of Indian Charlie was pushed hard and responded brilliantly as he produced a 3-for-3 record as a 2-year-old. He dominated his first three starts by a combined 23¼ lengths, including a 4¼-length romp in the Breeders' Cup Juvenile last November at Churchill Downs. That appeared to bode well before things went awry last month.


Animal Kingdom was at a farm, kicking back like a couch potato, while Uncle Mo was being drilled for the Juvenile.


Now, Motion thinks he is so fit and ready for the Preakness that he might not work him between starts.


"I'm not even sure it will be necessary," he said, "but we'll see."





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Animal Kingdom looking fresh in preparation for Preakness

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Some Kentucky Derby winners emerge from the rigorous 1¼-mile Run for the Roses with minimal wear and tear. Others reflect a significant drop in energy level and appetite and are the same horse in name only.





  • Fresh off his Kentucky Derby win, Animal Kingdom begins his preparation for the Preakness.

    By Luke Sharrett, AFP/Getty Images


    Fresh off his Kentucky Derby win, Animal Kingdom begins his preparation for the Preakness.



By Luke Sharrett, AFP/Getty Images


Fresh off his Kentucky Derby win, Animal Kingdom begins his preparation for the Preakness.






Fortunately for trainer Graham Motion, he believes he will bring a robust performer with a can-do attitude when he sends newly-crowned Kentucky Derby champion Animal Kingdom into next Saturday's Preakness Stakes at Pimlico Race Course in Baltimore.


"I'm impressed with how he handled everything," Motion said during a conference call with news reporters Thursday.


"His weight is good. He's making it easy for me. I couldn't be happier."


Animal Kingdom jogged each of the last two days at his home base, Fair Hill Training Center in Elkton, Md.


Although his workload is expected to increase this weekend, no formal workout is planned, another sign he is sharp.


"I think it's unlikely," Motion said. "I wouldn't normally work a horse who has two weeks between races. If he's good enough, he'll handle it.


"There is nothing I can do between now and then to make him any more competitive."


The trainer has a fresh horse entering the Preakness. The son of grass specialist Leroisdesanimeaux made three lifetime starts on synthetic surfaces and one on grass before becoming the first to win the Derby in his dirt debut with a convincing a 2¾-length victory against Nehro.


His four career starts are the fewest for a Derby winner since Exterminator in 1918. He enjoyed a six-week layoff between his Spiral Stakes victory at Turfway Park in Florence, Ky., and the opening leg of the Triple Crown.


Motion does not plan to ship Animal Kingdom to Pimlico until he completes his morning exercise at Fair Hill next Friday. It would be an unusually late arrival for a Derby champion.


"I think it's just a relaxing atmosphere for him (at Fair Hill)," he said, "and it kind of keeps him out of the craziness for a bit."


Peter Pan Stakes: Adios Charlie, Joe Vann and Prime Cut look to be the top contenders in a field of 11 for Saturday's Grade 2 Peter Pan Stakes as a prelude to the June 11 Belmont Stakes.


Adios Charlie gained his first career victory by 6¾ lengths on March 30 at Florida's Gulfstream Park and followed with a win in the Grade 2 Jerome at Aqueduct in New York on April 23.


Lazaro Cruz, assistant to trainer Stanley Hough, is confident Adios Charlie will maintain his form for the 11/8-mile Peter Pan.


"He ran huge in the Jerome, and it didn't seem to take much out of him," Cruz said.


Joe Vann, owner of a three-race winning streak whose most recent success came in the Illinois Derby, also is doing beautifully. But trainer Todd Pletcher is still working to get a grasp on his abilities after he went winless in four starts at age 2 and struggled home seventh in his 3-year-old debut before heating up.


"This will give us an idea of where he fits in the big picture," he said.


NBC deal: The New York Racing Association and NBC Sports Group announced a partnership to broadcast live racing from Saratoga Race Course over seven weekends from July 23 until Sept. 3, highlighted by the Travers on Aug. 27.


NBC will carry the Coaching Club American Oaks (July 23), the Alabama (Aug. 20) and the Travers. The remaining races will air on Versus.





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Sunday, May 8, 2011

Animal Kingdom wins 137th Kentucky Derby

Sunday, May 8, 2011
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LOUISVILLE ? Long shot Animal Kingdom, a lightly-raced colt who had never competed on dirt, triumphed in the most prestigious dirt race of all Saturday when he beat Nehro by 2 3/4 lengths in the 137th Kentucky Derby.





  • Veteran jockey John Velazquez earned his first Kentucky Derby win in 13 tries by getting the ride aboard Animal Kingdom.

    By Michael Conroy, AP


    Veteran jockey John Velazquez earned his first Kentucky Derby win in 13 tries by getting the ride aboard Animal Kingdom.



By Michael Conroy, AP


Veteran jockey John Velazquez earned his first Kentucky Derby win in 13 tries by getting the ride aboard Animal Kingdom.






"This game is a tough game. You can get the rug pulled out from under you any day," said trainer Graham Motion. "There aren't many fairy tale endings, but this is one of them."


For Motion and victorious jockey John Velazquez, the storybook ending in front of a record crowd of 164,858 came after each had encountered great adversity. When Motion flew to Churchill Downs last Tuesday, he left behind what many viewed as his top Derby hope when Toby's Corner was unable to ship here due to injury.


Throughout the winter and into the spring, Velazquez thought he was sitting in the catbird's seat with 2-year-old champion Uncle Mo. But then Uncle Mo, who had dominated his first four starts by a combined 27 lengths before bowing to Toby's Corner in the Wood Memorial on April 9, was scratched with an illness on Friday. That briefly left Velazquez without a mount until it was decided that he should be given an opportunity aboard Animal Kingdom.


Scheduled rider Robby Albarado had been dumped to the track head-first during a post parade last Wednesday. Although he was adamant that he would be well enough to ride in the Derby, the connections were so uncomfortable with the situation that they made the move to Velazquez, a top rider who had gone 0-for-12 in the Run for the Roses.


"Things happen for a reason," Velazquez said. "I guess when it's meant to be for you, it's meant to be for you, no matter what."


Animal Kingdom is the first champion to make his dirt debut in the Derby. He had competed three times on synthetic surfaces and once on grass. He defied convention in other ways as well.


His four career starts were the fewest for a Derby winner since Exterminator in 1918. The six-week gap between his 2 3/4-length victory in the Grade 3 Spiral Stakes — his only test against stakes company — and the 1 1/4-mile Run for the Roses marked the longest layoff since Needles in 1956.


"When you have a horse of this caliber," said Motion, "they overcome a lot."


Animal Kingdom's resume in winning twice with two second-place finishes on behalf of Team Valor International left plenty of room for doubt. The son of Leroidesanimaux returned $43.80 for a $2 win wager in what had been viewed as a wildly unpredictable edition of the 1 1/4-mile classic. A series of injuries and ailments had caused top contenders to fall by the wayside before they even reached the starting gate.


Mucho Macho Man ran a solid third for Kathy Ritvo, a heart transplant recipient less than three years ago who joined Kathleen O'Connell in attempting to become the first female trainer to win the Derby.


Ritvo already found herself looking ahead to the May 21 Preakness, the second leg of the Triple Crown, at Baltimore's Pimlico Race Course.


"He's only going to get better. He's only a June 15 foal," she said. "He'll come back hopefully in a couple of weeks if he comes back good and we're ready to go."


O'Connell's Watch Me Go had his chances hurt when he drew post 20. With Uncle Mo's scratch, he finished 18th in a field of 19.


Rosie Napravnik, bidding to become the first female rider to bring home the roses, had Pants on Fire forwardly placed as planned. They faded to ninth, however, one position behind favored Dialed In.


"He was in the back of the pack," said trainer Nick Zito of Dialed In. "He was dead last and they just never came back."


The high injury rate that marked the prep races continued in the Derby. Archarcharch (15th) was vanned off with a fracture in his left front leg that was not viewed as life-threatening. Last-place Comma to the Top chipped a bone in his left front ankle.





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